the show she could see why his face had been raved about in all the gossip columns and why every hostess in the capital was clamouring to get him onto her guest list.
It was an amazing faceâall carved aristocratic features and skin which gleamed like gold. His eyes were golden too, a deeper, darker shade which was closer to amberâand the jet-dark waves of his hair looked as if they had been swirled onto his head with the bold brush-strokes of some master artistâs charcoal pencil.Why, with his powerful presence she had found herself thinking that he looked almost like a statue himself.
But the stillness of his muscular body did nothing to deflect the fact that he had about him some nebulous quality which transcended his royal status. Melissa felt there was something rather wild and untamed about him.
And, of course, she hadnât spoken to him. She had been too busy supervising the mass of summer flowers which had garlanded the entrance to the grand house in an attempt to detract from the unseasonably heavy rain outsideâand reporting back to her hostess, who was a particularly exacting woman.
The evening had been memorable for another reason, tooâthe one which could always activate the dark aching hole inside her: the anniversary of her motherâs death in that terrible car crash. Melissa knew it was slightly pathetic for a young adult like herself to describe herself as an orphan, but on this one night of the yearâwhen she relived the terror of the midnight phone-call and the subsequent horror which had unfolded in the intensive care wardâthat was exactly what she felt like.
She had put her emotions on hold until the end of the evening when she had been unable to stem the tide of tears any longer and in a cloak room in a deserted part of the basement she had lost the battle, and given into quiet sobs of sorrow.
Eventually, emerging red-eyed into the corridor which led back up to the main part of the house, she had almost cannoned into a tall manâquickly turning her face to one side, too embarrassed to be seen by anyone in such a fragile state as she had tried to avoid him.
âHey,â came a silken voice whose marked accent should have alerted her but she was so busy dabbing at her eyes with a crumpled-up tissue that she failed to make the connection. âWhatâs the rush?â
âGo away.â Melissa gulped and the moment sheâd said it she realised just who he was and stared up at him in horror.
He looked as if he hadnât quite decided to be irritated or bemusedâas if he wasnât used to people saying that to him. And then his eyes drifted over her and Melissa wondered how vile she must look with her shiny red nose and blotchy skin.
âYouâve been crying,â he observed, with the air of a man who was never cried in front of.
Ten out of ten for observation , she thought miserablyâhating feeling so vulnerable and so awful in front of someone like him. âYes, I have,â she said, in a small voice, wondering why he wasnât upstairs drinking his champagne with the rest of the privileged gathering.
âWhy?â
âIt doesnât matter.â
âOh, but it doesâbecause I want to know. Donât you realise that I am a king?â His amber eyes glittered, his lips curving into a mocking smile. âAnd that everything I command is always granted?â
For a moment she thought he was jokingâand maybe he was, just a little. But she could also see that he expected an answer from her and so, with a sudden mulishness, Melissa decided to tell him. Then let him be sorry he had asked.
âItâs the anniversary of my motherâs death.â
There was a pause. âOh.â
She could see the sudden tightening of his face. Could hear the sudden chatter of conversation as a distant door was opened and the dull background patter of rain as it lashed against one of the basement doors.
Elizabeth Amelia Barrington